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Not Your Soldier

Posted by Maria Luisa Tucker at 1:37 PM on May 10, 2006.


Countering the military’s dogged recruitment of minority youth
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How many of us have high school friends that were suckered into the military with promises of bonuses, college money and cajoled with the fictitious “glory of war” and the idea that the military “makes you a man”?

I can count four among my friends—four young men who later regretted their enlistment and realized that had been duped into something they knew very little about. Thankfully, those friends are out of the military by now, but recruiters are continuing to target Latino kids with Hummers, bonuses, and glorified ideas of military life. And thankfully, there are counter-recruitment measures underway across the nation.

Today, Boing Boing noted one counter-effort in an organization called Not Your Soldier. By offering educational camps for youth aged 13 to 22, the organization is attempting to arm students with knowledge

Not Your Solider focuses on kicking military recruiters out of schools and/or telling the other half of the story to youth who are being wooed by recruiters -- it provides handbooks and comic books about military recruitment and suggests that students invite a local veteran from Iraq Vets Against War to speak at their schools. Here’s a tidbit from their website:

The Not Your Soldier Project gives youth the tools we need to stop the military invasion of our schools and our communities.
Not Your Soldier Action Camps bring together young people who are heavily targeted by military recruitment. At the camps, youth learn how to take action to fight military recruitment, the poverty draft, and the corporations that profit off of war.
Sounds about right. The organization promises to hold a camp for grown-ups (i.e. anyone older than 22) sometime this year.

Digg!

Maria Luisa Tucker is a staff writer at AlterNet and associate editor of the Columbia Journal of American Studies.


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Quakers
Posted by: brasilaron on May 10, 2006 2:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here in Athens GA, the local Quaker Meeting is wholeheartedly mobilizing schools to adopt counter-recruitment information and informing parents about ways to protect their children from invasive recruitment sneakery. The Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) is generally a good source of non-violence info and non-military options for kids (and adults) as well as being dedicated pacifists and (in my experience) good people. They are a quiet group so there may be some in your area and you might not even know it, so look around, maybe you'll find a valuable resource for all sorts of peaceful activities/activists.

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Proyecto Guerrero Azteca
Posted by: tiphane on May 10, 2006 9:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Last Sunday at our local peace center, I heard Fernando Suarez del Solar, Founder of Proyecto Guerrero Azteca, a counter-recruitment organization. His son was one of the first soldiers to be killed in Iraq, but his story did not stop there. The Pentagon told him his son was a hero, etc., but when the father wanted to see his son's body in the casket, there were soldiers to prevent him from opening it. They had said he had been shot in the head by enemy fire, so it would be an awful sight. The father got the police, and could finally see his son, and the truth. His son had not been hit in the face, he had died from friendly fire by a U.S. cluster bomb - a banned wmd.

His son had been recruited with the promise that it would get him the education to go into law enforcement.

Since then, the father has quit his job, and dedicated his life to educate young latinos about non-violence, the reality of army recruiting, and alternatives available to them.

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I Was A Soldier
Posted by: NoPCZone on May 11, 2006 9:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And I am proud of my service to our nation. However, If I were 18-22 today, I would probably not join. If you wish to serve in a professional Army without being part of the tragedy in Iraq, try the Armed Forces of Canada, Australia or New Zealand. They do take qualified people from the US and you might find a new home.

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Wrong message
Posted by: chomsky on May 11, 2006 11:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's this sort of anti-servicemen attitude that keeps so many of us with sypathetic left of center views from committing ourselves to to the liberal movement.

It's not the military that is bad, neither is the call to service of young men and women of any race, it's the way they are used by the administration in power. Quit treating the military like a the initiators of policy, they aren't. Go after the knuckleheads like Bush, Rummy and Cheney who use them improperly.

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no child left behind
Posted by: mister-wilson on May 11, 2006 11:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
postcard for counter recruitment efforts: theCoup.org/nochild.html

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But you forgot to say...
Posted by: poelmanc on May 12, 2006 1:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The obligatory "but we support our troops!"

Keep saying it over and over, maybe you'll start to believe it.

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Where are all the people who wanted the war?
Posted by: Callibrarian on May 14, 2006 10:34 PM   
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I propose that from now on whenever war is on the horizon we should first poll by telephone to ask who would support the war. For all those who answer yes we should ask them if they are willing to fight in the war, and display the difference between those who claim they are willing and the chicken hawks. Those who claim they are willing to fight should have their calls immediately transfered to military recruitment centers. If this had happened during the run up to the Iraq War I wouldn't have had to hear all the white middle class people at church talk about how the war was a wonderful thing but none of them were willing to fight in it, thus meaning minorities and the poor would get stuck fighting.

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Blame the "victim"
Posted by: YogiBear on May 18, 2006 1:54 PM   
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I don't really understand the need to fight military recruitment. We all make choices, and saying that youth make bad choices based on our own personal beliefs is exceedingly arrogant.

If you really want to stop people from joining the military, take away their financial incentives by fighting illegal immigration and offshoring; and for God's sake quit lining up behind the very people who are to blame for the wars in the first place, such as supposedly democratic congresspeople like John Kerry who signed away their ultra-important executive branch check just so they could look like patriots.

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Oh my God! What if Recruits Do Know What They Are Doing? Horrors!
Posted by: feller on Jun 18, 2006 5:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I find your article condescending if not racist. No one is fooled that the military does not involve the possbility of fighting. Terrorism and Iraq are in the news every day. the recruit is not a child. At 18 people have kids, hold fultime jobs, know a hell of a lot about the seamy side of life than 18 year olds 30 yrs ago.

The Left can't let anybody make decisions for themselves. That some kids might want to be part of the US instead of holding out for some kind of etbnic loser identity also si a choice the Left doesn't want its vision of the future Proletariat to be.

Another generation that includes veterans, patriots, members of the Army Reserve who go off at the age of 30 or more and do heroic things unrecognized by the intellectuals and professional leftists with unhappy lives.

How horrible. dumb black and hispanic kids! OOPS! Sorry. I meant to say: exploited hispanic and black cannon fodder who are recruited because they are minorities to satisfy the racist and fascist lust of George Bush, a known hater of minorities.

The Liberal Fantasy World ladies and gentlemen.

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